Boycott of Israel Not Curtailed (Continued from Page 1) in Israel and Lebanon were re-' ported last week to have secured the agreement of the two govern- ments not to confiscate each others cargoes, told the Financial Times that it has "not contemplated and does not contemplate the employ- ment in Lebanese ports of its vessels calling at Israel and is ig- norant of these rumors." CURFEW IN WEST BANK TOWN LIFTED; TERRORISTS TRACED TO BANK OF JORDAN JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israeli officials lifted a curfew imposed on the town of Jenin, in the Israeli- occupied West Bank, after Arab assailants fired machine guns Tuesday night at a military jeep. None of the occupants were hurt. A search for the assailants while the extended curfew was in effect indicated that the gunners had stolen a car to make their escape, and that they had driven it to the vicinity of the Jordan River. Offi- cials said they had apparently crossed over into Jordan. • • REPATRIATE 511 EGYPTIANS, ONE DEAD PRISONER OF WAR TEL AVIV (JTA) — Israeli authorities repatriated 511 Egyp- tian men, women and children who were captured when Israeli forces overran the Sinai Peninsula in last June's Six-Day war. The repatriates, who included 81 civilian wrokers employed on Egyp- tian military installations, crossed the Suez Canal under the super- vision of Red Cross representa- tives. At the same time, Israeli authorities handed over the body of an Egyptian prisoner of war who was killed when POWs rioted at the Athlit camp two weeks ago. * * * BEAD OF BELGIAN SENATE URGES SECURITY FOR ISRAEL, MID EAST 'MARSHALL PLAN' BRUSSELS (JTA) The chairman of the Belgian Senate declared at its opening session that there will be no solution to the Middle East problem until Israel's right to exist- ence and security is recognized by everybody, and until "the sad plight of the Arab refugees is equitably settled." Senator Paul Struye, who was re-elected to the chairmanship, called on the small powers, es- pecially Belgium, to take the initia- tive in formulating a "Marshall Plan type" of project for the Mid- dle East that would embrace financing, irrigation and land re- habilitation to provide work and food for the refugees and finally restore peace to the region. * • * INDIA'S PRIME MINISTER SEES MID EAST CRISIS GETTING MORE COMPLICATED NEW DELHI (JTA) — Mrs. Indira Ghandi, prime minister of India, expressed serious concern over the prospects of achieving a Middle East settlement and warned that, with the passage of time the situation, instead of im- proving, was getting more compli- cated and difficulties in the way of a settlement are increasing. Mrs. Ghandi told visiting newsmen, in- cluding a group of Egyptian jour- nalists, that India was working for a solution of an enduring nature ir' the Middle East, but that "some people" did not want an agreement and were adopting postures that are "short-sighted." Mrs. Ghandi said, in reply to questions, that the United States was unhappy with India's stand on the Middle East crisis but was not bringing any pressure to bear on India to change it. She called for "long-term views" in any solution, but stressed that the "aggressor should not be allowed to hold on to the f ruits of aggression." By "aggressor" she meant Israel. Obsrevers believe India is utterly disappointed with the failure of the United Nations Security Council to make any progress toward a Middle East settlement, and is preparing to raise the issue in the General Assembly where India is expected to suggest steps to be taken for forcing an Israeli withdrawal from Arab territories. * • • EBAN COMPLAINS OF ISRAELI MISQUOTATION REGARDING BORDERS IN INTERVIEW JERUSALEM (JTA) — Foreign Minister Abba Eban corrected a misquotation of a statement he made in a pre-taped television in- terview in New York, and protested angrily to the chairman of the Knesset foreign and security com- mittee for allowing that misquota- tion to be the basis of a political question raised at a session of the Knesset without consulting him as to its correctness. In a cable from New York, Eban gave the correct quote as follows: "In tha course of peace negotia- tions we will make our proposals about where the boundaries will be. It has been charged here that the foreign minister told the inter- viewer that the present cease-fire lines must not be the final boun- daries or else there would be nothing to negotiate about." • a • LONDON (JTA)—Great Britain and Egypt will resume diplomatic relations next month, and an ex- change of ambassadors will follow as soon afterwards as possible, it was announced here.. JERUSALEM (JTA) — Lt. Gen. Odd Bull, chief of the UN's cease- fire observers in the Middle East, letf for Cairo to continue discus- sions on implementing Secretary- General Thant's proposals for sterengthening the cease fire ob- servation machinery in the Suez Canal area. • s ROME (JTA) — Vice Premier • 6 Friday, November 24, 1967 — Nenni, leader of the Italian Socialist Party, called for an end to the "absurd polemics that Israel is an aggressor" and declared that the time had come for a reconciliation in the Middle East that will safe- guard the rights of both Arabs and Jews. s • s NEW YORK (JTA) — The nephew and namesake of the late Lord Arthur Balfour sharply criti- cized the British government's Middle East policy and warned both Britain and the United States against appeasement of the Arabs because there can be no lasting solution to the Middle East problem until "Nasser and the Arab leaders acknowledge that the State of Israel is here to stay." • • • UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (JTA) The Soviet Union, in a surprise move, submitted a draft resolution to the Security Council which Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily Kuznetsov claimed contained "all the key elements for a political solution" of the Middle Eastern crisis but which Israel's Foreign Minister Abba S. Eban character- ized, in his initial comment, as a "backward-looking resolution." Observers noted that for the first time, the Soviet Union had pre- sented a resolution which did not contain condemnation of Israel or demands for compensation to the Arab states for losses that they suffered during last June's Six-Day War. They also noted that the reso- lution made no mention of dis- patching a representative of the Secretary General to the Middle East. The Soviet draft called for the immediate withdrawal of "both parties" to the positions they held on June 4, 1967. 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